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America Inspired

Best of 2008 in Bay Area theater


C. Kelly Wright starred in the year's
best show, "Caroline, or Change," at
TheatreWorks in Mountain View.
Photo by David Allen

Theatergoing in the San Francisco Bay Area is one of life’s treats. No question about it. If you love theater, this is a wonderland. In this devastating economic climate, may that only hold true for the next couple of years.

There is so much good theater here, so many incredible actors, writers, directors and crafts people that an annual Top 10 is often difficult to wrangle. That’s why the Top 10 is followed by a list of other shows that should, by all rights, also be included in the Top 10, but numbers being the chronological beasts that they are, dictate on show per number (still, I cheated with No. 6 and included two shows by one playwright).

1. TheatreWorks’ “Caroline, or Change” by Tony Kushner and Jeanine Tesori – My favorite show of the year peeled yet another layer of this incredible musical to reveal a work of sheer genius. Director Robert Kelly and his extraordinary leading lady, C. Kelly Wright, offered some of their best work ever, and that’s saying something.

2. California Shakespeare Theater’s “Pericles” – Adapted and directed by Joel Sass, this incredibly colorful telling of one of Shakespeare’s oddest tales was entrancing and memorable, especially on a warm summer night in the gorgeous Bruns Amphitheatre in Ordina.

3. Campo Santo and Intersection for the Arts’ “Angry Black White Boy” adapted by Dan Wolf from Adam Mansbach’s novel – The year’s most exciting new work was a bold act of contemporary theatricality, blending hip-hop, spoken word, drama and movement into a seamless blend directed by Sean San Jose. Good news for anyone who missed it – the show returns to Intersection Jan. 29-Feb. 15.

4. SF Playhouse’s “Abraham Lincoln’s Big Gay Dance Party” by Aaron Loeb – We had to wait all year for a world-premiere play that entertained as much as it titillated and thrilled. Funny, serious and wacky, this Chris Smith-directed musing on a divided America proved to be as smart as it is imaginative.

5. Traveling Jewish Theater and Thick Description’s “Dead Mother, Or Shirley Not All in Vain” by David Greenspan --  Weird and wild barely begins to describe this play about a gay son who essentially becomes his dead mother. Outstanding, memory-searing performances came from Liam Vincent and Deb Fink in Tony Kelly’s production.

6. SF Playhouse’s “Shining City” and Marin Theatre Company’s “The Seafarer,” both by Conor McPherson – Ireland’s top-tier playwright received two outstanding productions by local theaters, each demonstrated his compassionate (and slightly warped) humanity.

7. Shotgun Players and Banana, Bag & Bodice’s  “Beowulf” – This rock musical take on one of college lit’s greatest hits was one of the year’s most delightful surprises. Composer Dave Malloy and writer Jason Craig breathed new life into an Old English classic. This one comes back for one performance only, Jan. 8, at Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s Roda Theatre, before heading out to conquer New York.

8. Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s “TRAGEDY: a tragedy” by Will Eno – Audiences were sharply divided over this existential dark night of the soul as filtered through a TV news team. I loved its Beckettian aridness and humor, and Les Waters’ production was anchored by an outstanding cast.

9.  Magic Theatre’s  “Octopus” by Steve Yockey – Water poured and unease flowed in director by Kate Warner’s spot-on production of a challenging, unnerving play in which death and disease ooze into every nook and cranny.

10. American Conservatory Theater’s “Rock ‘n’ Roll” by Tom Stoppard – ACT often does its best work with Stoppard, and this was on exception. Director Carey Perloff revealed the rich rewards of this dense, emotional work.

And now a few other greats in no particular order: Theatre Rhinoceros’ “Ishi: The Last of the Yahi” by John Fisher; Cal Shakes’ “An Ideal Husband” by Oscar Wilde; Magic Theatre’s “Evie’s Waltz” by Carter W. Lewis; SF Playhouse’s “Bug” by Tracy Letts; Word for Word’s Sonny’s Blues” by James Baldwin; Aurora Theatre Company’s “The Busy World Is Hushed” by Keith Bunin; ACT’s “The Quality of Life” by Jane Anderson; Berkeley Repertory Theatre’s “The Arabian Nights” by Mary Zimmerman; Aurora Theatre Company’s “The Best Man” by Gore Vidal.

It was quite a year for excellent solo shows as well. Here are some highlights: Nilaja Sun’s “No Child…” at Berkeley Rep; Colman Domingo’s “A Boy and His Soul” at Thick Description; Roger Rees’ “What You Will” at ACT; Ann Randolph’s “Squeeze Box” at The Marsh; Carrie Fisher’s “Wishful Drinking” at Berkeley Rep; Judy Gold’s “25 Questions for a Jewish Mother” at the Marines Memorial Theatre; Billy Connolly live at the Post Street Theatre; Mark Nadler’s “Russian on the Side” at the Marines

And, it has to be said, not everything is genius. Here are shows that lingered less than fondly in memory: Darren Romeo’s “The Voice of Magic” at the Post Street Theatre; Nikolai Gogol’s “The Government Inspector” at ACT; Cybill Shepherd in Bobby Goldman’s “Curvy Widow” at the Post Street Theatre; Edna O’Brien’s “Tir na nOg (Land of Youth)” at the Magic Theatre.

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SF Theater Examiner

Chad Jones has been covering theater in the Bay Area since 1992. He was the theater critic for the Oakland Tribune, Tri-Valley Herald and the San...

Comments

  • Laura Hope 3 years ago
    Report Abuse

    Dear Chad Jones,

    San Francisco’s Magic Theatre will close forever if
    $350,00 is not raised by January 9. The Magic has been an
    artistic home to countless artists over the years. I worked
    on the artistic staff of the Magic from 1996-2002, where I
    was given huge opportunities ranging from performer to
    Literary Manager to Festival Director. I’m just one of
    many to whom the Magic has given a great deal. This is the
    historic mission of the Magic: taking risks on emerging
    artists.

    Long after cities and nations disappear, or their power
    wanes, the artistic culture produced lives on -- as
    witnessed by the tragedies of ancient Greece, or Elizabethan
    England’s great artistic product: Shakespeare. The Magic
    has been a major venue for promoting new plays, playwrights,
    and other theatre artists in the U.S. from Sam Shepard in
    his early career, to the U.S. premiere of Marie Jones'
    “Stones in His Pockets” (prior to its award-winning
    London and Broadway runs). Cultures don’t produce writers
    like Euripides, Shakespeare, or Shepard without theatres
    committed to finding and developing them. Not enough
    theatres are committed to this. It would be a tragedy to
    lose one of San Francisco’s cultural treasures amidst
    current economic turmoil.

    I respectively ask you to do two things:
    1) Make a tax-deductible donation to the Magic Theatre.

    2) Use your position in the media to foster sympathetic
    awareness of the Magic's plight so others might donate.

    Sincerely yours,
    Laura Hope
    Resident Dramaturg, California Shakespeare Theater
    Assistant Professor of Theatre and Dramaturgy, Loyola
    University New Orleans

  • MJ Kasprzak 3 years ago
    Report Abuse

    I am thrilled to see someone else who thought Pericles was our best play (I work for Cal Shakes)--not the best material to work with, but the best production of material I have ever seen. And Ideal Husband was worthy of note, as well. However, I thought the San Jose Rep would have made your list somewhere, however: if not Around the World in 80 Days (end of '08), at least Splitting Infinity. They have had a tremendous season.

  • Michael 2 years ago
    Report Abuse

    Duuuude! SFMT! Red State! Where's the love?

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